Is a Concution I believe that is how you spell it.
Yes. And fatigue is likely to be a long term problem if the person was in a coma due to head trauma or a stroke.
Yes but brain damage is likely.
This can result in digestive problems, behavioral changes, brain damage, seizures, or coma.
Stroke damage is always somewhere in the brain. However, you cannot say that every person who has had a stroke and is in a coma has had the stroke in the same part of the brain. Strokes can affect just about any area of the brain.
Under normal conditions this would NOT happen. It would be the result of a coma, some severe trauma, or perhaps related to some special medical treatment.
It depends on the area of the brain affected -- here's a link to a good website that gives you specific problems caused by damage to specific parts of the brain. If a man has a brain damaged in an accident , he could well be in a coma or even end up as a vegetable. MY BRAIN DAMAGE CAUSES ME TO SHAKE UNCONTROLABLY MY ENTIRE BODY I AM SLOW AT TALKING AND STUFF LIKE THAT BUT I AM VERY SMART IT JUST TAKES ME LONGER TO SAY IT it can be like a computer virus: works fine one minute, then a virus comes in and there can be any type of problem that the virus comes with
It is technically common sense. Head and brain damage would most likely be the cause.
A coma is a deep state of unconsciousness, your brain is at its lowest activity level.
No. Exams of patients with encephalitis (inflammation of the brain) usually reveal a drowsy or confused patient but not in a coma. A person in a coma state can not be aroused.
There are several different ways a person can end up in a coma due to a brain injury. A person can go into a coma if the brains swells or bleeds after the injury.
You will be brain dead!! coma
The brain is constantly working even if a person is in a coma. The only reason this would change is because the person has gone brain dead and the brain is no longer producing waves of activity.